Kenneth Webb (director)
Kenneth Seymour Webb was an American film director, screenwriter, and composer noted for directing a number of films in the early age of the American film industry. He helped write the Gay Divorce along with Samuel Hoffenstein.
Selected songs
- "You and Me and You"
Career
Webb, beginning around 1910, became a sketch writer and director for vaudeville stage. In 1913, he began writing scenarios for the Vitagraph Company. From 1918 to 1919, he was a writer and director for Vitagraph. From 1919 to 1938, Webb was a writer and director, first with the Famous Players Film Company, then with Whitman Bennett and Associated [First National Theatres, Inc.], then Fox Film Corporation, then Whitman Bennett and United Artists, then Burr & Company, then Pathe, then Lee de Forest,, Tiffany Pictures, and then FitzPatrick Pictures. Webb wrote for legitimate stage since 1924. Since 1933, Webb was a radio writer and producer with Batten Barton Durstine & Osborn, Inc., and since 1953, was its Western editor.From 1943 to 1943, Webb was a lecturer at New York University of radio writing and production.
Partial filmography
As director- Marie, Ltd.
- Will You Be Staying for Supper?
- Sinners
- The Stolen Kiss
- The [Master Mind (1920 film)|The Master Mind]
- The Devil's Garden
- The Truth About Husbands
- The Fear Market
Realart Pictures Corporation - The Great Adventure
Whitman Bennett
Associated [First National Pictures, Inc.] - Jim the Penman
- Salvation Nell
- Fair Lady
- How Women Love
- The Daring Years
- The [Beautiful City (1925 film)|The Beautiful City]
- Just Suppose
Education
Webb attended The Collegiate School on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. He went on to study at Columbia University, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1906.Professional and fraternal associations
- Society of Cincinnati
- The Lambs, joined 1913
- ASCAP, 1914 charter member
- Songwriters Protective Association
- Actors' Equity Association
- Motion Picture Directors Association
- Radio Directors Guild
- Alpha Chi Rho